The Threepenny Review

Not Writing about Cézanne

A FEW YEARS ago, reviewing a show in London of Cézanne’s paintings of cardplayers, I began by saying, “Cézanne, whose work was the touchstone for critical thinking and writing on art for more than a century, cannot be written about any more.” And went on: “After a few minutes in the exhibition at the Courtauld, surrounded by Card Players and Smokers, one understands why. The mixture of seriousness and sensuousness in the paintings—I am tempted to say, in the best of them, of lugubriousness and euphoria—is remote from the temper of our times. And the quality of grim, eager pursuit of perfection within a deliberately narrow range—‘the difficult thing is to prove what one believes,’ Cézanne wrote to one correspondent, ‘so I am continuing my researches’—is likewise deeply foreign. It has a nineteenth-century flavor to it.”

The temper and pace of Cézanne’s art are unthinkable, in other words, apart from the grave, dogged optimism of a long-vanished moment. But that optimism was always perceived in his case to have taken a strange, maybe self-defeating, form. “He dares,” wrote a critic in 1895, at the time of Cézanne’s first one-man show (the artist was in his mid-fifties, and had been painting for three decades) “to be harsh and as it were savage, letting himself be dragged to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Threepenny Review

The Threepenny Review4 min read
Thanks to Our Donors
We are grateful to the following individuals, who in 2023 generously contributed to The Threepenny Review, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation. Friends of The Threepenny Review gave up to $99 each, those in The Silver Bells donated between $100 and $49
The Threepenny Review10 min read
What's So Great About a String Quartet?
Emerson String Quartet: Farewell Performance, Alice Tully Hall, New York, October 21, 2023. Danish String Quartet, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton, November 2, 2023. LET ME start by making a case for the form itself. The term is both musical and hum
The Threepenny Review1 min read
High C
This spring your whole inner life is Little Richard.You surrender to his octave-jumping high notes as he shakes out the fringes of his glittering coat. His boots glitter, too. How narrow, those feet. And those wigs! How full. “Is that your hair?” he'

Related Books & Audiobooks